Blog Post #2

How Fantasy Opens New Ideas For Reality – Blog Post 2

When one thinks of nonfiction they think fact. It’s a genre that will always provide relevant sources and materials to help support a certain topic. Similarly, topics like racial prejudice, the New Negro, and the identity of African Americans are all supported by facts. On the other hand, when we think about fiction there might… Continue reading How Fantasy Opens New Ideas For Reality – Blog Post 2

Blog Post #2 · Blogs

Conscious Pathbreakers: Escaping the “Ghetto”

Eunice Roberta Hunton once wrote, “Harlem is a modern ghetto”. Harlem of 1925 was not exactly the concentration camps of Warsaw, Poland where members of the Jewish community were kept forcibly segregated from others. The Nazis used their racist and prejudiced narratives to uproot, disrupt and stop the productivity of a whole community of people and created… Continue reading Conscious Pathbreakers: Escaping the “Ghetto”

Blog Post #2 · Survey Graphic: Harlem Mecca of the New Negro

A Tale of Harlem: Through the Eyes and Mind of those who lived it

Archibald Motley , Gettin Religion   When speaking of the mind we can relate it to several different things but often it plays a role in being creative and being imaginative. The eyes are part of our five senses and are sort of a recording camera for our brain to remember memories such as the… Continue reading A Tale of Harlem: Through the Eyes and Mind of those who lived it

Blog Post #2 · Survey Graphic: Harlem Mecca of the New Negro

Harlem: A Black Mecca

The Harlem Renneasiacce was in part defined by the creative and intellectual output spanning the likes of theater, literature, music, etc. And while that creative output makes up the parts of the defining era, at the center of the movement and why it was so successful was the physical location which became representative of the… Continue reading Harlem: A Black Mecca

Blog Post #2

Illustrations vs. Photographs of Harlem and The Crisis Culture

Between Illustrations and Photographs, there are two types of expressive art. They are both commonly alike because it shows how the artist is trying to depict and trying to tell us something about what’s going on in the art. Unlike others, some might find Illustrations and photographs not similar. I personally feel like they are… Continue reading Illustrations vs. Photographs of Harlem and The Crisis Culture

Blog Post #2

It takes perspective; Harlem in the eyes of the few

 Illustration/ Poetry and photography appear to be two different creative forms of art because while one uses words, the other uses images. But they have more in common than one may believe. Photos are good for providing a visual description and getting the viewer to see what the artist has captured, while illustration leads to… Continue reading It takes perspective; Harlem in the eyes of the few

Blog Post #2 · Crisis Magazine · Survey Graphic: Harlem Mecca of the New Negro

Blog Post #2 Final Draft

Art Depicting Fiction Vs Nonfiction

Non-Fiction and Fictitious works of literature both serve a similar purpose, which is to teach something, whether it be a lesson or a fact. They can both contain a setting, characters, and a plot and both types of writing can contain real people, events, or places. So, it’s safe to say they are comparable, but they also do different things. Works of fiction come directly from the authors imagination and are a product of make believe. Fiction tells a story through characters and a fictitious plot and is aimed to entertain and also sometimes teach a lesson. Examples of works of fictions are short stories and novels. Works of fiction aim at broadening our imagination and thinking process. When we read fiction, our minds are open to new possibilities and ideas that help us analyze and experience life through the perspective of others. Nonfiction is all about factual data. This type of literature is based on facts and is informative about real people, places, things, and events. While fiction comes from the authors imagination, with nonfiction, what’s important is the research and analysis done by the author to write the work of nonfiction. Examples of nonfiction works of literature include newspapers, biographies, autobiographies, textbooks, interviews, essays, and encyclopedias.  When compared to nonfiction, fiction has a more diverse variety of genres while nonfiction genres are limited to only a handful. Nonfiction engages the reader by informing them on real things or expressing to them ideas and thoughts.

The fictitious works in the readings such as the short story “The South Lingers On” or the poem “The Tropics In New York” express experience of those individuals the book is attempting to portray through a creative technique. The fictive works depict the image of the new negro better than the nonfiction works because they are a product of black creators’ creativity and imagination. The nonfiction works of literature are also impactful, as they use information and data to tell their stories and to depict the new negro.

Poetry is much like any form of imaginative literary artwork, much like short stories or fables. The purpose it is supposed to serve is to strengthen our brains, give us room for self-reflection, and to trigger our emotions. Poem’s area product of a creative mind behind the pen. Data on the other hand serves a different purpose. Data is information where there is a clear context and meaning. Information that is meant to become knowledge through experience to the reader. The readers then use this gathered information to confirm something they know, to predict what may happen, or to develop solutions to problems.

I personally prefer nonfiction works of literature rather than fiction, because I prefer to read to educate myself rather than entertain myself. Nonfiction works of literature offer real data and factual information that can help the reader in some way rather than what fiction does which is amuse and humor them. For example, I prefer reading about how to invest rather than read a fictive story about an investor.

Citation:

Fisher, Rudolf. 1925. “The South Lingers On”. Retrieved February 20th, 2022.

McKay Claude. 1922. “The Tropics in New York”. Retrieved February 20th, 2022

Yale University Library. https://collections.library.yale.edu/catalog/17368696